Nesta, the global innovation foundation (they're pretty much our perfect client, our strapline is digital for good and Nesta are all about innovation for good) wanted to transform their digital presence, building a new nesta.org.uk on a next generation platform.

Wagtail or Drupal?

The thing was, the Nesta brief indicated an expectation of Drupal 8 as the platform they wanted to build on. And, while we hadn't formerly dropped Drupal by then, we knew we were headed that way, recognising that it wasn't as good a platform as Wagtail.

Nesta hadn't closed the door on other open source systems (they are committed to open source), so, although we could have pitched D8, we took the risk and pitched Wagtail - we felt it was the right thing to do for Nesta and we were freshly boosted by the high-profile relaunch of NHS.uk on Wagtail.

We were looking for a platform that can do what we need now, but one that can also do much more, to set us up for the future.

– Sara Rizk, Head of Digital, Nesta

One thing that we felt certain about was that Wagtail was a better platform for the future, so we focused on:

The Incredible Growth of Python, September 6, 2017: https://stackoverflow.blog/2017/09/06/incredible-growth-python/

Python is fast enough for our site and allows us to produce maintainable features in record times, with a minimum of developers

– Cuong Do, Software Architect, YouTube.com

Personalisation capabilities - personalisation, or customer experience, will trickle down over time to play a more important role in more and more sites. Wagtail already has some exciting personalisation tools that are powerful and free.

Creative solutions drawn from insights into their users - we focused on combining personalisation with feature ideas to show how we imagine the next generation Nesta site will work, for example, how we would handle really long, long-form content.

Nesta ruled out a number of agencies with too much of a focus on technology. They wanted a partner that focused on their challenges, their audiences, and that would give pushback where needed. Happily, Nesta chose us and Wagtail.

More than fifty editors are already using Wagtail at Nesta, and the feedback has been overwhelmingly positive, "it's been very easy for people to pick up". Just as well as some of these editors only use a CMS a couple of times a year so switching might have been annoying. People have loved moving from the world of the big text area style of CMS publishing to something with the flexibility of Wagtail's Streamfield, only one person has missed being able to dump all their content into one text box (with the many associated problems that brings).

From wireframing to developing and evolving the new Nesta brand

Tell me something else about the site?

There's an interesting and unusual information architecture, there are some cool data visualisations, but if you want to check out one thing, I suggest you check out the long form content pieces like Flying High: The future of drone technology in UK cities. It's really long, long-form content, twenty-odd chapters, but it comes together really well as a piece of content that's easily managed within Wagtail. It's actually changing the way that Nesta think about the source material and how to produce it (Nesta produces 60-80 long-form publications every year including reports, policy briefings, landscape reviews and practice guides).

We also built a prototype feature that keeps your place in these long form content docs across multiple visits, so we'd like to add that in too!

What now?

As Sara says, “it was never our intention that launch would be it. A program of user testing is imminent on the live site and then we’ll be starting with the iterative improvements and innovations.”